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linguistic research 29 3 563 578 noun classes and subject honorification in korean 16 yong ha kim andong national university kim yong ha 2012 noun classes and subject honorification in ...

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                     Linguistic Research 29(3), 563-578
                     Noun classes and subject honorification in Korean*16
                                                    Yong-Ha Kim
                                               (Andong National University)
                        Kim, Yong-Ha. 2012. Noun classes and subject honorification in Korean. Linguistic Research 
                        29(3), 563-578. This paper deals with the problem of noun classification and subject 
                        honorification in Korean. In particular, it tries to provide a support for the syntactic 
                        approaches to subject honorification based on Park’s (1975) seminal work on the 
                        nature of honorific nominals. By giving some convincing evidence that shows φ
                        -features, especially gender features, are crucial factors determining the class of a 
                        given noun, this paper opens a way to accommodate subject honorification in the 
                        framework of generative grammar. (Andong National University)
                        Keywords  dative alternation, noun classes, subject honorification, gender, animacy, 
                                  humanness, honorificity, agreement
                     1. Introduction
                        Subject honorification in Korean is a very intricate issue in the sense that it is 
                     difficult to address within the realm of syntax because it seems to require some 
                     non-syntactic factors including social relations, situations of utterance, the speaker’s 
                     intention to honorify someone etc. as its name subject honorification suggests. Thus, 
                     it is natural for some researchers to have pursued approaches that obviously call for 
                     non-syntactic, semantic and pragmatic analyses in accounting for the nature of 
                     subject honorification in Korean (cf. Lim 2000, Kim and Sells 2007).
                        On the other hand, there have been efforts made to account for the phenomenon 
                     following the guidelines offered by generative syntax. For example, Choi (2009, 
                     2010), among others, tries to explain subject honorification by positing that the 
                     honorific marker -si- is an Agr head and that the phenomenon is a kind of 
                     agreement between the subject and Agr in a sentence. Let’s collectively call this 
                      * I thank Etyan Zweig and Peter Sells for their sharp criticisms. I also express my gratitude to 
                       Chegyong Im for his interest in this paper and to the anonymous reviewers for their helpful 
                       comments and suggestions. All errors are, of course, mine.
          564  Yong-Ha Kim
          group of researchers the syntactic camp, while the former group the pragmatic camp.
            These two camps in accounting for the phenomenon of subject honorification 
          have merits and weaknesses on their own, which are too many to say here, but we 
          can say that it seems desirable for the syntactic camp to seek a way to explain 
          subject honorification in terms of agreement, a notion extensively used in syntax. 
          However, what kind of agreement is subject honorification? The first thing that 
          comes to mind in this regard is the agreement of the “honorific” feature, a notion 
          that is difficult to accept as syntactic or formal feature. In order to accommodate 
          things like honorific agreement, the syntactic camp should accept non-syntactic 
          notions like “subject’s intention to honorify someone” as formal features for 
          agreement.
            Contrastively the semantic/pragmatic camp does not have to undergo this kind of 
          predicament as it is comfortable with notions like intention, social relation etc. 
          However, the semantic/pragmatic camp should suffer criticism in that it should admit 
          that there are non-linguistic elements like si that don’t have any purely linguistic 
          features relevant to syntax/grammar.
            Given this situation, this paper tries to provide a support for the syntactic camp 
          regarding the analysis of subject honorification in Korean. It argues based on Park 
          (1975) that subject honorification involves a syntactic operation of φ-feature 
          agreement in the sense of Chomsky 1995, 2000. However, different from other 
          works in the syntactic camp, this paper argues that the φ-features that are clearly 
          involved in subject honorification are gender features like [± animate] and [± 
          human]. The line of analysis this paper pursues will also shed light on the nature of 
          the so called honorific nominative case particle kkeyse as it is involved in the system 
          of gender agreement (or concord) between some particles corresponding to 
          Indo-European prepositions and certain noun classes in Korean.
          2. Noun classes and genders in Korean
          2.1 Dative alternation and noun classes
            It is well known that Korean has an alternation among dative particles ey, eykey, 
          and  kkey according to the classes of nominals they are attached to. It is generally 
                                                Noun classes and subject honorification in Korean  565
                     admitted in traditional Korean grammar that the alternation between ey and eykey is 
                     more basic.
                         (1) a. Chelswu-ka    kkoch-ey   mwul-ul   cwu-ess-ta.
                                     -Nom flower-Dat water-Acc give-Past-Dec
                               “Cheolsu watered flowers.”
                            b. Chelswu-ka  Swunhi-eykey  mwul-ul   cwu-ess-ta
                                     -Nom      -Dat    water-Accgive-Past-Dec
                               “Cheolsu gave water to Sunhi.”
                         Notice that the indirect object of sentence (1a), kkoch ‘flower’ has life but is not 
                     an animate entity, while the indirect object of sentence (1b), Swunhi ‘Sunhi’ not only 
                     has life but also is an animate entity. We can therefore safely say that the feature 
                     that determines the alternation between ey and eykey is [±animate] in their combined 
                          1
                     NP’s.  However, things are complicated when kkey comes in because it is also 
                     attached to animate nominals but clearly contrasts with eykey.
                         (2) a. Chelswu-ka   Swunhi-eykey  mwul-ul    cwu-ess-ta
                                     -Nom       -Dat    water-Acc give-Past-Dec
                               “Cheolsu gave water to Sunhi.”
                            b. Chelswu-ka    emeni-kkey    mwul-ul   tuli-ess-ta
                                     -Nom mother-Dat  water-Acc  give(Hon)-Past-Dec
                               “Cheolsu gave water to his mother.”
                         An immediate question that arises with respect to the contrast between (2a) and 
                     (2b) is “what is the feature that determines this alternation between eykey and kkey?” 
                     It could not be [± animate] because emeni ‘mother’ as well as Swunhi clearly is an 
                     animate entity. Given that emeni is in a sense treated as an honorified being, and 
                                                              2
                     that  tuli, a suppletive form of cwu ‘give,’  is used to honorify emeni, one can be 
                       1 We do not give other examples showing the animate vs. inanimate contrast with respect to the 
                        particles at stake because their alternation is well-established in Korean grammar. However, a point 
                        that should be made in this regard is that there are cases where the alternation between the two 
                        particles does not occur. We will not deal with such cases, but the reader is referred to Yu 2003, 
                        and to Kim 2007 for some discussion.
                       2 Ko (1987) argues against tuli as a suppletive form for cwu because it can occur with or without 
            566  Yong-Ha Kim
            tempted to take the feature [± honorific] as one crucially involved in this alternation. 
            Using this feature, we can come up with tentative feature specifications for NP’s that 
            are combined with the particles.
             (3) a.  ey-NP’s: [-animate, -honorific]
               b.  eykey-NP’s: [+animate, -honorific]
               c.  kkey-NP’s: [+animate, +honorific]
             However, the feature specifications in (3) are problematic in two respects. First, 
            the feature specifications in (3) have a gap as the feature combination [- animate, + 
            honorific] doesn’t have its place in (3). Second, given the fact that honorification is 
            a semantic/pragmatic notion, the feature specifications in (3) are half-semantic and 
            half-grammatical as animacy falls within the φ-feature system. Thus, (3) fails to 
            capture the deep nature of the alternation among the dative particles though it seems 
            observationally and descriptively plausible.3
             To account for the alternation among the dative particles, we’d rather approach 
            this issue via some other route. First of all, one can take a close look at the forms 
            of the particles in question as they have similar phonetic forms, which suggest their 
            morphological kinship. A first haste analysis of their forms would treat ey in (3a) as 
            the most basic form, then eykey as a derived form by attaching key to ey, and finally 
            kkey as an element formed by the deletion of ey from eykey plus tensification of the 
            first consonant. Of course, this imaginary analysis is far from correct but it contains 
            a truth: all the particles contain ey as a common part.
             Then, what is the correct analysis of the forms of the dative particles? Park 
            (1975) argues convincingly that the first syllable ey [e] in eykey is not the dative 
            particle ey but is the monopthongized form of the genitive particle uy. His argument 
            is supported by the fact that this ey is pronounced as u, [ɨ] in the south-west dialect 
            of Korean, and hence the dative particle for eykey is ukey in this dialect. Park’s 
            (1975) argument receives further support when it comes to the morphological 
             sap, a prefinal ending used for object honorification. As Ko’s argument is mainly based on data 
             from middle Korean and the inflectional mechanism of object honorification is no longer productive 
             in modern Korean, we do not accept his argument. See Chung 2007 and 2009 for the treatment of 
             this form in the framework of Distributed Morphology.
              3 Eytan Zweig pointed out at a UOY syntax & semantic research group meeting that he saw no 
             reason to reject [± honorific] as a φ-feature. We will discuss this problem in section 2.2.
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...Linguistic research noun classes and subject honorification in korean yong ha kim andong national university this paper deals with the problem of classification particular it tries to provide a support for syntactic approaches based on park s seminal work nature honorific nominals by giving some convincing evidence that shows features especially gender are crucial factors determining class given opens way accommodate framework generative grammar keywords dative alternation animacy humanness honorificity agreement introduction is very intricate issue sense difficult address within realm syntax because seems require non including social relations situations utterance speaker intention honorify someone etc as its name suggests thus natural researchers have pursued obviously call semantic pragmatic analyses accounting cf lim sells other hand there been efforts made account phenomenon following guidelines offered example choi among others explain positing marker si an agr head kind between ...

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